Download Partisan Cycles in Offshore Outsourcing: Evidence from U.S. Imports

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Embedded liberalism wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Partisan Cycles in Offshore Outsourcing:
Evidence from U.S. Imports∗
Pablo M. Pinto
University of Houston
[email protected]
Stephen Weymouth
Georgetown University
[email protected]
Abstract
The wage and employment effects of offshoring roil politics around the world. Firms
that offshore can choose to either outsource activities to unaffiliated businesses or
to establish production subsidiaries from which to import intrafirm. How does the
political environment in trade partner countries influence firms’ offshoring strategies?
Drawing on the political business cycle literature, we expect higher production costs
for firms in capital (labor) intensive sectors when the Left (Right) is in power. These
partisan cycles in turn shape the degree to which firms seek the protection of intrafirm,
as opposed to outsourced, trade. Faced with a Left-leaning government, multinational
corporations in capital (labor) intensive industries are more likely to import intrafirm
(outsource). Examining highly disaggregated U.S. import data, we find strong support
for our argument. Our results indicate that the effect of partisan governments on
offshore outsourcing depends on factor intensities of production, which vary across
industries.
Keywords: democracy, foreign direct investment, global supply chains, intrafirm trade,
offshoring, outsourcing, partisan governments, property rights
∗
Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the 2013 Meeting of the International
Studies Association, the 2013 Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, and the
2013 Meeting of the American Political Science Association. The authors are grateful to
Lawrence Broz, Marc Busch, Peter Gourevitch, Stephan Haggard, Tobias Hoffman, Helen
Milner, Dennis Quinn, Peter Rosendorff, David Stasavage, and Mike Tomz for excellent
comments and suggestions. All errors are our own.
1
Introduction
Globalization has been described as a “great unbundling” (Baldwin, 2006) whereby production is diced into stages conducted in different corners of the world. As part of the great
unbundling, firms now increasingly source from abroad (“offshore”) to exploit differences in
relative factor prices and input costs (Helpman, 1984; Grossman and Rossi-Hansberg, 2008).
While potentially economically beneficial, the globalization of production is undoubtedly
politically controversial (Scheve and Slaughter, 2004; Mansfield and Mutz, 2013). A growing
literature finds that the income and employment implications of firms’ offshoring activities
influence outcomes as diverse and important as U.S. presidential voting (Margalit, 2011;
Jensen, Quinn, and Weymouth, 2015a) and international economic relations (Milner, 1988;
Manger, 2012; Gawande, Hoekman, and Cui, 2014; Jensen, Quinn, and Weymouth, 2015b;
Owen, 2015a). It is clear that offshoring roils politics.
Our paper reverses the causal arrow to examine how politics influences offshoring.
Specifically, we ask: How does the political environment abroad influence firms’ decisions
about whether to produce abroad and from where to source? To explain these decisions, we
present a theoretical framework integrating insights from studies of the political determinants
of trade (Rogowski, 1987a,b; Hiscox, 2001; Milner and Kubota, 2005; Milner and Judkins,
2004) and foreign direct investment (FDI) (Jensen, 2003; Li and Resnick, 2003; Pinto, 2013;
Owen, 2015b), as investment and trade are intimately linked. Indeed, U.S.-based multinational corporations (MNCs) account for more than 90% of U.S. imports, and nearly half of
all U.S. imports are traded “intrafirm” between the headquarters and its global affiliates.1
1
See Bernard, Jensen, and Schott (2009). When a firm produces abroad, it engages in
so-called vertical FDI, which involves setting up subsidiaries in foreign countries to save on
production costs. Vertical FDI precedes intrafirm trade. Alternatively, a firm may choose
to outsource the input to an unaffiliated supplier. In some cases, firms find it cost effective
1
We propose that partisan governments abroad influence firms’ global integration decisions and the content of trade flows. Since distributive concerns motivate partisan governments to pursue policies that expand economic activity for core constituents (Quinn and
Inclan, 1997; Rogowski, 1989; Hiscox, 2002), we argue that partisan governments abroad
influence the costs associated with outsourcing. Changes to the policy environment initiated
by governments with different partisan orientations (i.e., governments with dominant allegiances to either labor or capital) affect relative prices and production costs. Left-leaning
governments will tend to pursue policies that encourage the expansion of labor-intensive
sectors in order to increase demand for the services of the Left’s core constituents: workers,
the unskilled, and the poor (Quinn and Inclan, 1997; Pinto and Pinto, 2008; Pinto, 2013),
while raising the costs in capital-intensive activities. Right-leaning governments, on the other
hand, are more likely to promote the expansion of capital-intensive industries, increasing the
costs in labor-intensive sectors.2 These partisan policy cycles change the costs of producing
and procuring abroad, which should help explain variation in firms’ reliance on intrafirm, as
opposed to outsourced, trade transactions.
Moreover, partisan cycles abroad will influence offshoring activities differently across
industries with different factor requirements (“intensities”) of production.3 For instance,
higher taxes and regulation of capital under the Left could increase the costs of doing busito source from affiliated companies; in other cases, it is more cost effective to import from
unaffiliated sources (i.e., to outsource).
2
The expansion of the labor intensive sector of the economy and contraction of capital
intensive activities leads to traditional magnification effects along Stolper-Samuelson lines
(Stolper and Samuelson, 1941).
3
Our argument linking partisan changes in host governments to intrafirm trade builds on
international economics literature that finds substantial interindustry variation in intrafirm
trade. Firms tend to import capital-intensive goods intrafirm, and outsource the production
of labor-intensive goods to unaffiliated parties (Antr`as, 2003; Nunn and Trefler, 2012).
2
ness for firms in capital-intensive sectors, leading these firms to retreat to the protection of
intrafirm trade under the Left. Hence, we predict higher (lower) intrafirm trade in capital(labor-) intensive industries when the Left is in power.
We examine our argument linking partisan policy cycles to the boundaries of the firm
in the global economy using highly disaggregated trade data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
The Census data records for all U.S. merchandise trade whether the parties conducting trade
transactions are related.4 Using these data we are able to analyze firms’ sourcing decisions,
including both offshore outsourcing to third parties and importing from related parties.
We follow the international trade literature on the boundaries of the multinational firm
in exploiting fine-grained industry-level import data to analyze how industry characteristics
shape firms’ offshoring decisions.5 These data allow us to test our sectoral-partisan argument
while controlling for the multitude of industry and country characteristics that may also be
associated with FDI and intrafirm trade.
4
The United States is one of the few countries that collects separate data on related-party
and arm’s-length transactions. To our knowledge, ours is the first paper in political science
to attempt to explain variation in the data. For applications in economics, see Bernard et al.
(2010) and Nunn and Trefler (2012).
5
Much of the existing international political economy research on FDI is constrained to
some degree by its reliance on aggregate FDI flow data, which do not enable researchers to
distinguish between horizontal and vertical FDI or examine interindustry variation (B¨
uthe
and Milner, 2008). Kerner and Lawrence (2014) argue that studies relying on aggregate
flows derived from balance of payments statistics are biased to the extent that the industry
composition of FDI correlates with the institutions themselves. Another source of ambiguity
is heterogeneity in the liquidity of FDI, which is a key determinant of investment risk.
Liquidity varies across industries, but is not accounted for in studies that rely on aggregate
flows.
3
We find that politics in partner countries plays a central role in explaining the location and scope of global production. Our results indicate that firms are more likely to set up
vertically integrated affiliates (i.e., to engage in vertical FDI) in more democratic countries,
which is consistent with the extant literature on the political determinants of foreign investment (Jensen, 2003, 2008). We find that the existence (or not) of democratic institutions
does not help explain the share of trade conducted intrafirm over time, however. Instead, the
evidence supports our sectoral-partisan hypothesis: the partisan orientation of the government in partner countries has a sizable effect on the proportion of trade that is conducted
intrafirm. The direction of the partisan effect depends on the factor intensity of production in the industry as predicted. Examining within-country-industry variation in intrafirm
trade over time, we find that the share of trade conducted intrafirm increases (decreases) in
capital- (labor-) intensive industries when the Left is in power in the partner country. In sum,
our paper provides some of the first insights into the political economy of firms’ offshoring
decisions, with important implications for employment, income and inequality around the
world.
2
Politics and the Globalization of Production
Despite the increasing relevance of the globalization of production for countries’ growth
prospects, as well as the salience of offshoring in domestic political conflict, we know surprisingly little about how political conditions abroad influence firms’ global production strategies. One of the reasons for the lacuna is that the research streams examining the political
economy determinants of trade and FDI have developed mostly in isolation. While enduring
characteristics of the polity—such as democratic governance—should influence the establishment of vertical affiliates, we observe sharp variance in intrafirm trade shares over time that
is unlikely to be explained by relatively stable institutions. In this section, we develop an
argument linking partisan policy cycles to firms’ offshore outsourcing activities.
4
MNCs are the dominant actors in international trade, and their production strategies
often involve a complex set of activities in multiple locations around the world. To sharpen
the conceptual focus, we refer to Figure 1. Firms make sourcing decisions along two relevant
dimensions.6 The first dimension is whether to source domestically or abroad. Domestic
outsourcing is fairly uncontroversial; offshore outsourcing, on the other hand, has become
a subject of heated political debate. Firms that offshore must decide how much control
they will exert over the production process—i.e., whether to procure offshored inputs from a
third party (offshore outsourcing) or from an affiliated supplier (intrafirm trade). A vertical
move across the right-most quadrants in Figure 1 captures a firm’s decision to internalize
production or to offshore outsource. This choice is at the center of our analysis.
Figure 1 about here
The global production strategies of MNCs differ markedly. For example, Apple has
historically conducted research and marketing domestically and in house, and has offshored
the production of the components of its products to firms in a host of countries.7 Intel
Corporation for many years offshored part of its production of microprocessors to a wholly
owned $300 million production facility in Costa Rica (Antr`as and Rossi-Hansberg, 2009);
imports into the United States from the plant were characterized as intrafirm. Nike also
relies on offshore production, but it does so outside the boundaries of the firm, sourcing from
subcontractors in a number of low-wage countries. Nike’s imports from its subcontractors
6
See Mansfield and Mutz (2013) for a detailed discussion of offshore outsourcing.
7
Consider the Apple iPad: the touchscreen is made by Wintek in China, Taiwan, and
India; the SIM card by Infineon and Qualcomm in Germany, Singapore, Malaysia, and the
United States; and the battery pack by Dynapack in Taiwan. Parts for the main printed
circuit board (PCB) alone are made by at least seven firms in manufacturing plants worldwide.
5
are interfirm, or arm’s length. Apple, Intel, and Nike all engage in offshoring, but Intel does
so within the boundaries of the firm while Apple and Nike do not.
Global sourcing decisions depend on the price of the goods and services purchased,
and the costs of establishing and maintaining a supply network. We assume that firms seek
to maximize profits, which implies that firms sourcing decisions will attempt to minimize
costs. Technological developments have reduced transportation and communication costs,
enabling more firms to source from abroad (“offshore”) to exploit differences in relative factor
prices and the costs of inputs. Offshoring can lower the costs of performing tasks, producing
intermediate goods, or completing vertical production stages (Helpman, 1984). Unbundling
the production process allows firms to gain the productivity benefits of specialization while
also locating production in the most economically attractive locations (Grossman and RossiHansberg, 2008).
While these economic incentives for offshore production are well understood, they
cannot however explain all of the intraindustry and temporal variance in firms’ global production activities. In particular, we observe substantial variation in intrafirm trade shares
within industries, both across countries and over time. For instance, Figure 2 illustrates intrafirm imports as the share of total imports in one relatively capital-intensive industry, Basic
Chemicals (NAICS 3251). Depending on the country of origin, intrafirm import shares in
Basic Chemicals range between 0.23 and 0.99; within countries, these intrafirm trade shares
vary over time (as shown below). These facts are difficult to reconcile based on economic
factors alone.
Figure 2 about here
The literature on the political economy of FDI examines how political conditions
abroad affect the risks associated with foreign investment. Much of this work highlights
the costs of establishing an affiliate abroad, and the ways in which strong institutions help
secure those investments against expropriation. Among the institutional features that are
6
conducive to investment, the literature focuses on democratic constraints on the executive
and property rights in reducing investment risk (Li and Resnick, 2003; Jensen, 2003, 2008).8
That is, strong democratic institutions may lower the fixed costs of establishing production
affiliates abroad. Paradoxically, however, Bernard et al. (2010) show that sourcing from
unaffiliated parties abroad tends to be more secure in countries with better institutions—
reducing intrafirm trade once foreign subsidiaries are present.9 Thus, while better-quality
institutions reduce the costs of setting up an affiliate, they may lower transaction costs and
make arm’s length trade more appealing.
To resolve this ambiguity and to explain variation in intrafirm trade over time, we
propose an explanation that focuses on the partisan orientation of governments in partner
countries. We examine how the distributional concerns of partisan-motivated governments
will affect the costs of offshore outsourcing differently across industries. Our emphasis on
changing costs and relative prices due to partisan policy cycles helps explain why we observe
temporal variation in intrafirm trade even in the context of strong institutions. We expect
partisan governments to shape firms’ decisions about whether to import from subsidiaries or
unaffiliated suppliers.
While vertical FDI implies additional costs associated with setting up and managing
an affiliate in a foreign country, some firms find it cost effective to exert greater control over
the production stages.10 One reason is that in a world of incomplete contracts, in which
actors cannot specify the course of action in every possible contingency (Coase, 1937), firms
8
See Jensen et al. (2012) for a comprehensive review of the literature linking democracy
and FDI.
9
Specifically, Bernard et al. (2010) show that the rule of law is associated with vertical
affiliate presence, but with lower intrafirm trade shares once vertically integrated MNCs are
established.
10
The costs of transacting within markets as opposed to within the boundaries of the firm
are explained by the inherent incompleteness of contracts and the specificity of investments.
7
must weigh the risk that their counter-party will exploit the relationship specificity of the
investment to extract rents from them in the future (Williamson, 1985; Grossman and Hart,
1986; Hart and Moore, 1990), a problem commonly known as “holdup.”11 Vertical integration
may reduce the risk of holdup or provide a source of power that strengthens the buyer’s ex
post bargaining position in the event that unforeseen contingencies arise (Grossman and
Hart, 1986; Hart and Moore, 1990).12
The holdup problem may be particularly acute for firms that source intermediate
inputs from abroad, due to the relatively long time lag between placing an order and receiving
the product or service.13 Antr`as (2003) argues that firms in capital-intensive industries
are more likely to integrate their foreign suppliers, which is consistent with his motivating
empirical observation that intrafirm trade shares appear higher in sectors that rely more
heavily on capital-intensive inputs. Nunn and Trefler (2012) also find that intrafirm trade
shares are higher in capital-intensive industries, while related research by Bernard et al.
(2010) finds that firms making contract-intensive investments prefer to vertically integrate
their global suppliers.
11
Williamson (1985) argues that the risk of holdup is greater when the supplier and buyer
make relationship-specific investments, defined as those for which the value of the assets is
higher inside the relationship than outside it.
12
In these property rights models of the firm, holdup risks are endogenous, and both the
supplier and the buyer need incentives to invest. Vertical integration does not eliminate
opportunistic behavior, but it can increase efficiency by providing residual rights of control
or power derived from the ownership of assets, which incentivizes investment from the final goods producer. Owners have stronger ex post bargaining positions when unforeseen
contingencies arise.
13
Antr`as (2003) examines the implications of incomplete contracting for firms’ offshoring
activities, particularly headquarter decisions on whether to integrate foreign suppliers or
import at arm’s length.
8
Our central insight is that the political environment in partner countries affects firms’
integration and production activities, which contributes to variation in intrafirm trade across
industries.14 The effect of institutions, prominent in the extant literature, is likely to operate
primarily on the costs of setting up vertically integrated affiliates, a prerequisite for intrafirm
trade. Yet good-quality institutions may reduce the incentives to source from related parties,
since arm’s-length contracts become more enforceable.
Variation in intrafirm trade over time may be better explained by changing costs,
including the price of inputs and the costs of complying with national regulations and policies. These costs can be attenuated or exacerbated by changes in the policy environment
in partner countries. That is, we expect policy-induced changes in costs and prices to be
reflected in offshore outsourcing patterns, particularly in the share of trade conducted intrafirm. Consistent with the economics literature, we expect higher costs to make intrafirm
transactions more appealing.15
14
We draw on research in international trade that shows that country-level factors explain
the location of global production and trade patterns for different industries in different ways.
Consistent with Heckscher-Ohlin comparative advantage, Yeaple (2003) finds that firms in
capital-intensive industries are more likely to set up vertical production affiliates in capitalabundant countries, where it is relatively cheaper to produce capital-intensive goods. Nunn
(2007) finds a source of comparative advantage in the quality of institutions: countries with
good contract enforcement tend to export more in industries characterized by high levels of
relationship-specific (“contract-intensive”) investments.
15
Our argument and empirical strategy also relate to the literature on global value chains
(Gereffi, Humphrey, and Sturgeon, 2005). We supplement the contribution of these authors
by analyzing how political conditions affect the relative performance of networks based on
markets or hierarchies, which represent the two extreme categories in their typology (Gereffi,
Humphrey, and Sturgeon, 2005, p. 83–84).
9
To explain changing costs, we turn to partisan policy cycles. Shifts in the partisan
orientation of the governing coalition profoundly affect the costs of offshore-outsourcing
due to the distributional objectives of partisan leaders. While under general conditions
increased trade and investment can create positive welfare gains, economic integration also
has distributional consequences, which may motivate partisan leaders to restrict or expand
the flow of goods, capital, and other factors of production (Pinto and Pinto, 2008; Jensen
et al., 2012; Pinto, 2013). As the flows of goods, services, and factors of production across
borders have significant distributional implications, partisan motivations lead governments
to choose policy instruments that affect these flows, and thus the economic well-being of
their constituents (Quinn and Inclan, 1997).
How do partisan governments influence prices and production costs? Due to differences in their support coalitions, governments favor the expansion of economic activity in
some sectors more than in others. Governments with different partisan motivations enact
taxes, provide subsidies, and regulate trade and other economic activities in starkly different ways. Depending on their support base, parties provide a more favorable policy and
regulatory environment for firms operating in certain sectors of the economy, the expansion
of which would result in higher demand for the services provided by their core constituents
(Pinto and Pinto, 2008, 2011; Pinto, 2013).
Our assumptions about the partisan motivations of governments are drawn from the
traditional accounts of political business cycles. In particular, we assume that Left-leaning
governments are more likely to pursue policies that encourage the expansion of labor-intensive
sectors and discourage capital-intensive activities through taxes, subsidies and regulation
(Quinn and Inclan, 1997; Pinto and Pinto, 2008; Pinto, 2013), while Right-leaning governments will target capital-intensive sectors for growth. A large literature identifies partisan
policy cycles in a range of policy areas such as regulation (Iversen, 1999), trade and investment barriers (Brooks and Kurtz, 2007; Garrett, 1998; Pinto, 2013), and fiscal policy
10
(Esping-Andersen, 1990). These partisan policy cycles will shape the prices charged and the
costs of doing business for domestic and foreign firms.
We expect firms’ production costs to depend on both the party in power and the
characteristics of the industries in which they operate, since factor intensities of production
vary by industry. Firms in capital-intensive industries will face higher costs under Leftleaning governments; conversely, firms in labor-intensive industries will face higher costs
under the Right. To illustrate, assume that Left-leaning governments target the capitalintensive sector for contraction, through taxes and regulation (or more generally, through
changes in relative prices). These policy interventions increase prices, reducing the demand
for capital-intensive goods. The combination of higher costs and lower revenue leads to a
contraction of sales in the capital-intensive sector, in domestic and foreign (export) markets
alike.16
These changes will be reflected in intrafirm trade shares differentially across sectors,
as firms in disadvantaged sectors retreat to the protection of intrafirm trade. Higher costs
in capital-intensive sectors under the Left will lead to more intrafirm trade relative to total
trade in these sectors. Similarly, higher production costs in labor-intensive sectors under the
Right will increase the share of trade conducted intrafirm in labor-intensive sectors.
Partisan cycles are likely to have differential effects on intrafirm and arms’ length
trade patterns. Policy-induced increases in relative costs and prices will depress total exports
16
That is, we expect the contraction of the capital-intensive sector and expansion of the
labor-intensive sector of the economy would lead to magnification effects along StolperSamuelson lines. As they contract, capital intensive activities release more capital than
labor, making labor relatively scarcer in both sectors. While this can lead to an increase in
wages, the wage increases are likely to be offset by the expansion of labor intensive activities.
The gains thus accrue to the labor-intensive sector; while producers of capital intensive goods
are harmed.
11
in the disadvantaged sectors, with arm’s-length exports falling more rapidly than intrafirm
exports. The relative resiliency of intrafirm trade to partisan cycles is in part a result of
the particular characteristics of MNC networks and their activities. First, MNCs and their
affiliates tend to be larger and more productive than their local counterparts (Bernard et al.,
2012). The relative increases in costs in the targeted sector force a drop in the quantities
demanded and supplied, weeding out the less productive firms (Antras and Helpman, 2004).
Second, the costs of switching suppliers are higher in capital-intensive activities, where firms
tend to be more sensitive to holdup problems. This motivates MNCs to integrate production
by setting up and sourcing from affiliates abroad.17 Switching costs are thus higher for firms
sourcing from affiliated parties than for those sourcing at arm’s length. Third, MNCs—
which can employ transfer pricing, export platform operations, and other practices—should
be better able to absorb the policy-induced increases in the variable costs of production than
unaffiliated domestic firms operating in the partner country.18
To recap our argument, we expect partisanship to influence patterns of offshore outsourcing through changes in production costs. Our theory predicts partisan policy cycles will
17
Switching costs are higher in the presence of relationship-specific investments, which
increase the value of internalization (Nunn, 2007). MNCs tend to be active in activities in
which relationship-specific investments are more important (Antr`as, 2003), which potentially
increases the costs of switching suppliers.
18
U.S. firms’ ability to absorb the costs of higher taxation through transfer pricing is mit-
igated by tax laws, such as section 468 of the U.S. Tax Code, and international agreements,
such as double taxation treaties, which dictate that intrafirm transactions should be valued
as if they were conducted at arm’s length. Yet identifying and enforcing the arm’s-length
price equivalent of related-party trade is problematic in the presence of capital-intensive,
relationship-specific investments, which are at the center of our analysis. In any event,
firms that are part of a global production network should be better able to absorb the costs
associated with policy changes in partner countries.
12
affect relative costs for different sectors in different ways, leading to variation in intrafirm
trade as a share of total trade. As costs increase and the sector contracts, MNCs retreat
to the protection of intrafirm trade transactions. We expect MNCs in capital-intensive industries are more likely to resort to intrafirm transactions under Left-leaning governments;
in labor-intensive industries, MNCs will feel less vulnerable when sourcing from unaffiliated
parties under the Left. Furthermore, higher production costs will likely depress arms length
exports in the sector, but the greater productivity of MNCs—and the adaptability of their
operations—results in more resilient intrafirm trade flows relative to arms-length flows. In
sum, as relative prices change and variable costs rise in disadvantaged sectors, the net effect
is higher intrafirm trade as a share of total trade. Our argument thus predicts higher (lower)
intrafirm trade shares in capital- (labor-) intensive industries when the Left is in power. In
the next section, we examine the following empirical implication of our argument.
Hypothesis. Intrafirm imports as a share of total U.S. imports will increase (decrease) in
capital- (labor-) intensive industries when the Left is in power in the partner country.
Figure 3 presents suggestive evidence that is consistent with our argument. We graph
changes in U.S. intrafirm shares of imports of Basic Chemicals, a capital-intensive industry,
from New Zealand and Australia, two countries with robust democratic institutions. Vertical
affiliates of U.S. MNCs are present in both countries, as evidenced by the positive intrafirm
trade shares. Yet the share of trade conducted intrafirm varies substantially over time. There
is a sharp increase in the U.S. intrafirm import share from Australia after the Australian
Labor Party gains power following the election in late 2007. The comparison with New
Zealand is stark: the ascent of the Right-leaning National Party to power in late 2008
coincides with a decline in the share of U.S. related-party imports of Basic Chemicals from
New Zealand. Figure A.1 in the Appendix reinforces these results: the share of U.S. imports
conducted intrafirm from both countries is higher under Left-leaning governments.
Figure 3 about here
13
In the ensuing empirical section, we more rigorously examine the content of our
argument across countries while considering a number of alternative explanations and sources
of bias.
For one, it may be the case that Left governments affect the costs of labor-intensive
activities through offsetting channels. For instance, by seeking to increase the returns to
labor (e.g., through improved labor rights, increased wages and unionization), Left-leaning
governments may increase the costs of labor-intensive activities relative to capital-intensive
activities. Such an argument could imply higher intrafirm trade shares in labor-intensive
activities under the Left. This logic, however, contradicts the partisan trade and investment
literature, which suggests that partisan parties seek to reduce trade and investment costs
when such liberalization is expected to expand the activities of their core constituents (see,
for example, Milner and Judkins (2004) and Quinn and Inclan (1997)). Consistent with this
literature, we expect an expansion of trade flows in favored sectors along the partisan lines
we describe above. Our empirical analysis directly examines the validity of our argument
relative to competing explanations.
We also attempt to isolate our causal mechanism against an alternative channel—the
asset-specificity, rather than the factor-intensity, of investments. The concepts are similar:
capital-intensive activities tend to exhibit high levels of asset specificity,19 yet each points
to a district causal mechanism through which partisan governments may influence intrafirm
trade. An argument privileging the asset-specificity of investments may assert that partisan
governments influence the perceived security of the contract environment, or the commitment to contact enforcement. The logic would imply higher intrafirm trade shares when
that environment is viewed as less secure. If so, higher intrafirm trade in capital-intensive
activities under the Left would reflect weaker perceived property rights, rather than higher
(factor-induced) production costs. In the ensuing empirical section, we attempt to isolate
19
For example, aircraft manufacturing is both capital-intensive and characterized by
relationship-specific investments.
14
this alternative causal mechanism from our own by employing distinct measures of factorand asset- specificities.
3
Empirical Analysis
To test our hypothesis about the relationship between host country politics and offshoring
activities, we follow the empirical literature on the boundaries of the multinational firm,
which relies on highly disaggregated import data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau since
2002.20 Importers are required by law to report the value of each shipment imported into the
United States, and whether the shipment comes from a related party.21 We rely on import
data at the NAICS 4-digit industry level. The sample consists of all industry-country pairs
with positive imports. The related-party trade data enable us to capture how industry- and
country-level characteristics shape the location of vertical affiliates and the share of intrafirm
imports.
Our main independent variables come from standard sources. We use the Polity score
as the primary measure of democratic governance. For political partisanship we rely on data
from the Database of Political Institutions (DPI) (Beck et al., 2001).22 The economic data
20
The related-party trade data are publicly available at:
http://sasweb.ssd.census.gov/relatedparty/.
21
Parties are related if one owns at least 6% of the other. See Section 402[e] of the Tariff
Act of 1930.
22
Following Dutt and Mitra (2005), Pinto, Weymouth, and Gourevitch (2010), and Wey-
mouth and Broz (2013), we employ the DPI coding of the partisan orientation of the chief
executive in presidential systems, that of the largest party in government in parliamentary
systems, and the average of the two for countries coded as ‘mixed’ (assembly-elected presidentialism).
15
are from the World Development Indicators. Summary statistics appear in Table A.1 in the
Appendix.
3.1
Political Determinants of Vertical FDI
The extant literature points to political institutions as fundamental determinants of multinational investment. Institutions have the potential to constrain expropriation and reduce
political risk, which in turn lowers the fixed costs of establishing and operating an affiliate
abroad. The literature finds that democratic governance in particular produces stronger
property rights regimes and reduces the risk of expropriation (Olson, 1993; Jensen, 2003;
Li and Resnick, 2003; Henisz, 2002). Firms should be more confident in setting up vertical affiliates in democracies, because the institutions associated with democratic governance
(checks on expropriation, rule of law, and contracting rights) result in lower fixed costs.
To capture location choices, which figure prominently in the institutional literature,
we follow Bernard et al. (2010) in assuming that positive intrafirm trade for a countryindustry pair reflects the presence of a vertical affiliate of an MNC in the partner country.
That is, to capture vertical affiliate presence in 2002, the first year available in our data, we
construct an indicator variable that takes a value of 1 if we observe positive U.S. intrafirm
imports in industry i from country j, and 0 otherwise.
Table 1 reports coefficient estimates of the cross-sectional determinants of vertical
affiliate presence in 2002. The models are estimated using logistic regression. The coefficient
estimates reported in Column 1 indicate that democracy is associated with a higher likelihood
that vertical affiliates are present. A one-standard deviation increase in Polity score is
associated with an increase of approximately 6 percentage points in the predicted probability
of positive intrafirm trade (i.e., the probability that a vertically integrated affiliate is present).
The substantive impact of democracy is second only to GDP in determining affiliate presence.
16
The result holds to alternative measures of political institutions such as political rights
(Freedom House), as reflected in Column 2.
Table 1 about here
One way in which institutions may reduce fixed costs is by establishing strong checks
on opportunistic behavior by the host government. Indeed, consistent with this argument,
Column 3 shows a strong correlation between the measure of political constraints developed by Henisz (2000, 2002) and the presence of vertical affiliates. A one-standard-deviation
change in political constraints from the mean results in an approximately 5-percentage-point
increase in the probability of vertical affiliate presence; a movement from no political constraints (observed in countries with autocratic rule in the sample) to the highest observed
levels of political constraints in 2002 (Belgium) results in roughly 16-percentage-point increase in the probability of vertical investment.
Next, we explore variation in the sensitivity of different industries to democratic
institutions in order to better understand the casual channel linking democracy to vertical
affiliate presence. Our motivation for this approach is that some industries will be more
dependent on the set of institutions commonly associated with democracy due to the legal
requirements of their operations. We find that democratic governance appears to be more
important for firms operating in activities in which contractual concerns loom large, due to
the relationship specificity of these investments. In Column 4 of Table 1, we interact Nunn’s
(2007) measure of industry contract intensity with Polity scores.23
23
Nunn (2007) calculates, for individual goods, the share of inputs that is not transacted
on “thick” markets (i.e., markets characterized by having many buyers and sellers, which
implies that the value of the good outside the relationship is close to the value within the
relationship). Thick markets foster less relationship specificity, since if the buyer (seller)
attempts to renegotiate the price ex post, the good can be sold to (bought from) another
17
Figure 4 illustrates the average marginal effect of a one-point increase in Polity score
on the probability that a vertical affiliate is present, along the full range of contract intensity,
based on the estimates reported in Column 4 of Table 1. The marginal effect of democracy
is positive and significant starting at very low levels of contract intensity, and increases with
the industry requirement to enforce private contracts. Our results suggest that democracies
lower the fixed costs of entry for firms in contract-intensive industries.
Figure 4 about here
While democracy is more conducive to vertical FDI, it paradoxically may lead to
reductions in the intensity of intrafirm trade with affiliates over time because arm’s-length
transactions tend to be more secure in better institutional environments. Democratic governance will encourage the establishment of vertical affiliates, but not necessarily increase the
share of intrafirm trade once affiliates are present. Our argument suggests that the share
of intrafirm trade in industries with vertical affiliates will vary over time as a function of
partisan policy cycles motivated by the distributional consequences of investment and trade.
We explore this hypothesis in the following section.
3.2
Sectoral-Partisan Cycles in Intrafirm Trade
We turn now to examine our partisan explanation of variation in intrafirm trade over time.
Our empirical strategy attempts to identify more precisely the causal channels linking political conditions with the global production activities of MNCs by examining variation across
sectors. The motivation behind our empirical strategy is that sourcing choices in certain
industries will depend more on particular partisan alignments largely for reasons related to
the industry-specific factor content of production.
firm. Markets for goods that have a referenced price in a trade publication or are sold on an
exchange are considered thick markets.
18
We are interested in examining variation in intrafirm trade shares during the available
window of data (2002-2012) in industries with vertical affiliates. Our empirical specification
regresses measures of intrafirm trade on country-level characteristics Xj , industry-level contract and factor intensities Zi , and interactions between country and industry characteristics
Xj × Zi :
Yijt = ςj + τt + αXjt + βZit + γ(Xjt × Zit ) + ijt .
(1)
In the remaining empirical analysis, we examine U.S. related-party imports as a share
of total U.S. imports for industry i originating in country j in year t. We construct a measure
of industry-level capital intensity using data from the 2002 U.S. Census Bureau’s Census
of Manufactures. We gather data on annual capital expenditures and employee wages to
construct our measure.24 Following Nunn and Trefler (2012), Capital Intensity is the log of
total capital expenditures in industry i divided by total worker wages in that industry.25
24
Consistent with prior literature, we observe that our measure of capital intensity corre-
lates strongly with intrafirm trade. See Figure A.2 in the Appendix.
25
Along with the extant literature, we assume that capital intensities in the U.S. data
correlate with those in the same industry in other countries. While country-specific factor
intensities would be preferable, data are not available to generate these measures for a large
sample of countries. Instead, analysts presume that industry characteristics are largely
technologically determined, so that the intensity orderings do not vary from one country to
another. That is, while capital-abundant countries may use more capital than capital-scarce
countries, this is true across all industries in a way that keeps the capital-intensity ordering
of different industries consistent across countries. See Nunn and Trefler (2013).
19
We account for industry characteristics with our measure of capital intensity.26 To
analyze the conditional effects of the political environment in the host country across different industries, we examine interactions between political factors Xj and industry factor
intensities Zi . The main coefficient of interest, γ, captures the differential influence of partisanship and democracy Xj across industries with different characteristics. Our time-series
models include country ςj and year τt fixed effects.
We report our estimates of the determinants of related-party trade shares during the
period 2002-2012 in Table 2. The dependent variable is the share of total imports that
qualifies as related-party imports for each country-industry pair in which vertical affiliates
are present. Since we include country and year fixed effects, we omit the time-invariant
controls from the previous models. The model reported in Column 1 examines the relationship between democracy and intrafirm import shares. We find that democracy is negatively
associated with related-party imports, but the relationship is not statistically significant.
Further, we find no evidence that democracy influences intrafirm trade shares among more
contract-intensive industries (Column 2). These results are consistent with the conjecture
that democratic institutions induce vertical FDI primarily through the fixed costs of establishing affiliates.
Table 2 about here
Next, we examine variation in partisanship in host country governments. The results
in Column 3 indicate that the Left has no independent effect on the share of intrafirm trade
where affiliates are present. Note that we expect the effect of partisanship to vary across
sectors according to the factor requirements of production, and the results in Column 4 are
consistent with our argument. In particular, the results indicate that the share of intrafirm
26
In additional models we include industry fixed effects ϕi . The industry dummies absorb
numerous omitted sectoral features, such as factor intensities of production, average levels
of competition, average size, and productivity.
20
to total trade is higher for capital-intensive industries when the Left is in power.27 Column
5 shows that the results are robust to industry-specific dummy variables in addition to the
country and year fixed effects.
Figure 5 demonstrates the conditional marginal effect of the Left at different levels
of capital intensity based on the parameter estimates reported in Column 4 of Table 2. A
Left-leaning government coincides with higher intrafirm trade in capital-intensive industries,
and with lower intrafirm trade in labor-intensive industries. The positive marginal effect
of the Left becomes statistically significant where capital intensity equals -1.29 (“NAICS
3119–Other Food Manufacturing”); here the Left is associated with a 1 percent increase in
the intrafirm import share. At capital intensity one standard deviation above the observed
mean (to a level corresponding to “NAICS 3361–Motor Vehicles”), the marginal effect of the
Left is equivalent to a 1.4 percent increase in intrafirm trade as a share of total trade. This
estimated effect represents a substantial increase, equivalent to approximately $2.1 billion
on average among the largest 10 exporters to the United States, and $133 million for the
average U.S. trade partner.28
Figure 5 about here
27
Figure A.4 in the Appendix shows that the change in the natural log of total imports
from partner countries is negatively correlated with capital intensity under the Left (see
Table A.2). This result is consistent with our argument that partisan cycles increase the
relative prices of inputs in capital-intensive activities. The finding that the ratio of intrafirm
trade increases under the Left suggests that arms’ length trade drops more than related
party trade, as predicted.
28
In 2012, the average value of total U.S. imports from the top 10 largest exporters to the
United States was $152 billion; the average value of imports among all U.S. trade partners
was $9.5 billion.
21
We address the potential selection bias of industries with a vertical affiliate presence
using the well-known Heckman two-stage estimation procedure. For the excluded variable,
we rely on Quinn’s capital account openness index (Quinn, Schindler, and Toyoda, 2011)
since capital account liberalization should correlate with affiliate presence but not with the
share of intrafirm trade once subsidiaries are established. The results (reported in Columns
6 and 7 of Table 2) remain robust to this specification.
In Table 3, we examine the robustness of our results to a number of additional specifications. In column 1 we introduce country-year dummy variables, which absorb all timevarying country characteristics (as well as those that are time invariant). These could include,
but are not limited to economic factors such as growth and inflation. Country-year fixed
effects also account for the multitude of institutional features that likely influence trade and
investment such as bilateral investment treaties (Elkins, Guzman, and Simmons, 2006; RoseAckerman and Tobin, 2005; Tobin and Busch, 2010), along with country-specific shocks such
as wars or financial crises. Column 2 includes a yearly time trend to account for increasing
intrafirm trade over time. We then introduce country- and industry-specific time trends in
Columns 3 and 4. In Columns 5 and 6, we allow the standard errors to cluster by country
and by country-industry, respectively. The model reported in Column 7 includes the lagged
endogenous variable. Our results retain statistical significance in each of these additional
specifications. We find higher intrafirm trade in capital intensive industries when the Left is
in power.
Finally, to provide greater assurance that the mechanism operates through the factor intensity of production, and not through the contracting environment, we include an
interaction term Left × Contract Intensity in Column 8. This model has the property of
a placebo test: while capital and contract intensity are correlated, the results from this
model in combination with the previous results suggest that the association between the
Left and increased intrafirm trade shares operates through factor intensities in production.
22
We find no evidence that increases in intrafirm trade under the Left are explained through
the contracting environment or the contractibility of the traded inputs.
Table 2 about here
3.3
Robustness to Subsamples
Our theoretical framework assumes that the headquarters is sourcing goods either at arm’s
length or from related parties in foreign countries. Our empirical analyses assume that
the importing parent company is located in the United States, and that intrafirm imports
originate from foreign subsidiaries. However, the data from the Census Bureau’s relatedparty trade database do not allow us to distinguish between imports by U.S.-based parent
firms from their affiliates abroad and imports by U.S.-based affiliates from foreign-based
parent firms. As noted in Zeile (2003), the share of imports by U.S.-based affiliates from
their foreign parents is nontrivial.
Since we seek to examine the factors leading MNCs with headquarters in the United
States to trade with affiliates abroad, our next set of robustness tests exclude countries
where intrafirm trade is more likely to involve U.S.-based affiliates of foreign MNCs. The
subsamples are identified using firm-level data from Bureau van Djik’s Orbis dataset, which
provides detailed performance data for headquarters and subsidiaries of multinationals from
around the world. Nunn and Trefler (2012) identify MNCs for which either the parent or
the subsidiary is located in the United States. This information is used to calculate, for each
partner country, the share of total MNCs with U.S. headquarters (see Nunn and Trefler,
2012, Table 4). For example, according to the Orbis data, Finland reports 231 firms with
relationships with the United States. Of these, 89 are parent firms based in the United
States with affiliates in Finland, and 142 are U.S. affiliates of parent firms based in Finland.
Thus in Finland, just 39% of firms that have relationships with the United States involve
a U.S.-based parent firm. The inference is that much of the related-party imports from
23
Finland will likely be mediated by U.S.-based affiliates importing from their headquarters in
Finland rather than by MNCs headquartered in the United States, as our theoretical model
assumes.
Following Nunn and Trefler (2012), we first exclude countries for which U.S.-based
parents account for less than 50% of the relationships in the Orbis data (Subsample 1).29 We
then pursue an even more cautious approach, purging all countries below the 75% threshold
(Subsample 2).30
We also examine our main hypotheses in the subsample of non-Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. Our motivation for this sample
restriction is twofold. First, U.S.-based affiliates of foreign parents are more likely to originate
in OECD countries, and so excluding OECD countries provides an additional subsample of
firms that are likely to represent the setup of our theoretical model. Second, we observe that
the fragmentation of production increasingly occurs in developing countries. Figure A.3 in
the Appendix displays the growth in imports for two industries characterized by high degrees
of fragmented production. The figure demonstrates that imports of computers, semiconductors, and other manufactured components increasingly originate in developing (non-OECD)
countries, making the non-OECD nations a particularly appropriate environment in which
to test our theory of the outsourcing decisions of firms engaged in global production.
Columns 1-3 of Table 4 report estimates of the relationship between democracy and
vertical affiliate presence conditional on the contract intensity of the investment. The models
include country fixed effects. As in the full sample results reported in Table 1, we find that
29
This excludes Finland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, and Switzerland.
30
This excludes Finland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, Sweden, Taiwan, Bel-
gium, Bermuda, Norway, Denmark, South Korea, Japan, Spain, Israel, Austria, France, and
Germany.
24
democracy is associated with an increased likelihood of vertical affiliate presence, particularly
in more contract-intensive industries.31
Table 4 about here
We examine our sectoral-partisanship hypothesis in the restricted samples in Columns
4-6 of Table 4. The results indicate that Left-leaning governments are associated with higher
intrafirm trade shares in capital-intensive industries, and that the relationship is particularly
strong in non-OECD countries. Figure A.5 in the Appendix illustrates the marginal effect
of the Left across the range of capital intensity based on the results reported in Column 6
of Table 4. Intrafirm trade shares in capital- (labor-) intensive industries increase (decrease)
when the Left is in office. Since the data from this set of countries are highly likely to reflect
the offshoring activities of firms headquartered in the United States, we interpret the results
as strongly supportive of our argument.
4
Conclusion
Offshoring is central to big political battles over the distributional impact of globalization.
Where production is located—and from which firm it is sourced—shapes employment and
wages in the United States and abroad. While economic factors clearly influence offshoring,
political factors should also be central. Yet they have been largely missing from the literature
to date.
In this paper, we have attempted to fill the void by examining global offshoring
patterns through detailed trade data. We argued that the costs and benefits that shape
firms’ offshoring decisions derive in part from the political environment abroad. First, we
find that democratic institutions, which figure prominently in the extant literature, correlate
31
In models without interaction terms, we find that Polity enters positive and significant
at the 99% level of confidence across the three subsamples.
25
with the establishment of vertical production subsidiaries. Democratic governance appears to
reduce the fixed costs of setting up an affiliate abroad, particularly for firms that rely heavily
on the enforcement of private contracts. However, democratic institutions do not explain
offshore outsourcing decisions over time—the partisan interests of incumbent governments
do.
Since host governments’ allegiances to either labor or capital are associated with policy changes that affect the costs of producing and sourcing from abroad, we argue that the
partisan orientation of host governments determines the proportion of trade that is conducted intrafirm over time. Firms in capital-intensive industries retreat to the protection of
intrafirm transactions when Left-leaning governments are in power. Firms conducting laborintensive activities, on the other hand, are more likely to trade at arm’s length under the
Left. We link host country distributional concerns associated with the consequences of economic integration (Gawande, Krishna, and Olarreaga, 2009) to MNC production strategies
and trade patterns.
Our paper complements and extends the literature on international trade and investment by examining the political forces that shape the location and scope of global production
networks. The analysis provides new insights into the politics of globalization by examining
vertical FDI and trade in a unified framework. We analyze how the economic incentives to
internalize production and to trade with related parties, which prior research shows to vary
by industry, interact with political conditions in the host country to determine whether firms
offshore to related parties or outsource. Consistent with Bernard et al. (2010), we show that
the decision to establish a production affiliate abroad differs from the choice of how much to
source from that affiliate. While strong institutions attract investment, the share of intrafirm
trade reflects partisan political alliances favoring either labor or capital.
Our paper suggests that firms’ global production activities respond to costs derived
from political (rather than just economic) factors. Consistent with the important recent
contribution by Kerner and Lawrence (2014), our study further demonstrates that the effect
26
of politics on investment and trade depends on production requirements that vary across
industries. Our results validate previous research showing higher intrafirm trade in capitalintensive industries (Antr`as, 2003; Bernard et al., 2010). We extend this work by demonstrating temporal variation in firms’ reliance on intrafirm trade in capital-intensive industries,
which we explain through changes in the partisan policy environment in the host country.
Our findings, based on novel industry-level data, conform to our theoretical expectations concerning the effect of partisan cycles on intrafirm trade flows. Examining offshore
outsourcing patterns over time, we find that the host government’s support coalition appears
to shape the degree of outsourcing by MNCs, depending on the factor intensity of their investments. Specifically, labor-aligned (Left) governments are associated with a greater share
of intrafirm trade in capital-intensive industries. Our paper demonstrates how traditional
partisan alliances influence multinational production strategies.
The global production strategies of firms give rise to a number of new issues in the
political economy of globalization, with important implications for politics and policy. Liberalization of investment should not be viewed in isolation from trade: where investment by
MNCs occurs, trade will follow. Indeed, the emergence of global supply chains is the byproduct of trade and investment liberalization, including the liberalization of communication,
transportation and business services (Lanz and Miroudot, 2011). Recent trade agreements
reflect this coupling of services, investment, and trade flows. New theories on the distributional impacts of liberalization should consider the consequences for domestic firms and
foreign affiliates alike. Where MNCs have a large presence and are vertically integrated,
trade liberalization may not lead to big increases in exports by domestic firms, as market
shares may reallocate toward more productive MNCs (Baccini, Pinto, and Weymouth, 2015).
Despite the novelty of our contribution, there are numerous opportunities for improvement and extensions in future research. While we show that democratic institutions
tend to attract vertical, resource-seeking forms of FDI, we do not explore whether these
institutions are any more or less meaningful for firms making horizontal, market-seeking
27
investments.32 The ways in which institutions and partisan governments may attract alternative forms of FDI merit further investigation, and firm-level data will likely be necessary to
investigate these complexities.33 Moreover, while our strategy has been to exploit industry
characteristics to uncover which specific institutions shape vertical FDI, future work could
provide new insights by more explicitly examining variation in the strength of contracting
and other legal and political institutions. Another promising avenue could be to examine the
set of policies most likely to shape variable production costs and intrafirm trade flows over
time. Our results imply that firms view partisan governments in different ways, depending
on their factor requirements of production. While our simplifying assumption has been that
partisan distributional motivations generate broadly consistent partisan policy cycles across
countries, policy variation could be exploited to better understand how governments’ policy
choices shape patterns of production in the global economy.
32
Recent research finds that MNCs often blend various forms of FDI: the average foreign
affiliate of a U.S. MNC sells around 75% of its output in the host country, ships nearly 10%
back to the United States, and exports the remaining output to third countries. Moreover,
these shares vary within affiliates over time (Bilir, Chor, and Manova, 2013).
33
Data limitations present a formidable obstacle to this line of research. One potential
source of data is the firm-level Surveys of U.S. Direct Investment Abroad, which are conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). These data are confidential and
only available to researchers selected by the BEA to work on site as unpaid special sworn
employees. While these data can be used to examine horizontal FDI in specific countries
at the firm level, they are not useful for examining intrafirm trade shares with particular
countries, since data on trade flows between U.S. MNC parent firms and unaffiliated parties
are not disaggregated by country.
28
References
Antr`as, Pol. 2003. “Firms, Contracts, and Trade Structure.” The Quarterly Journal of
Economics 118 (4): 1375–1418.
Antras, Pol, and Elhanan Helpman. 2004. “Global Sourcing.” Journal of Political Economy
112 (3): 552–580.
Antr`as, Pol, and Esteban Rossi-Hansberg. 2009. “Trade and Organizations.” Annual Review
of Economics 1 (1): 43–64.
Baccini, Leonardo, Pablo M Pinto, and Stephen Weymouth. 2015. “The Dark Side of International Trade Agreements.”.
Baldwin, Richard. 2006. “Globalisation: the great unbundling (s).” Economic Council of
Finland 20 (2006): 5–47.
Beck, Thorsten, George Clarke, Alberto Groff, Philip Keefer, and Patrick Walsh. 2001. “New
tools in comparative political economy: The Database of Political Institutions.” The World
Bank Economic Review 15 (1): 165–176.
Bernard, Andrew B, J Bradford Jensen, and Peter K Schott. 2009. “Importers, exporters and
multinationals: a portrait of firms in the US that trade goods.” In Producer Dynamics:
New Evidence from Micro Data. University of Chicago Press pp. 513–552.
Bernard, Andrew B, J Bradford Jensen, Stephen J Redding, and Peter K Schott. 2010.
“Intra-firm trade and product contractibility.” American Economic Review: Papers and
Proceedings 100 (2): 444–48.
Bernard, Andrew B, J Bradford Jensen, Stephen J Redding, and Peter K Schott. 2012.
“The Empirics of Firm Heterogeneity and International Trade.” Annu. Rev. Econ. 4 (1):
283–313.
Bilir, L. Kamran, David Chor, and Kalina Manova. 2013. Host Country Financial Development and MNC Activity. Working paper.
Brooks, Sarah M., and Marcus J. Kurtz. 2007. “Capital, Trade, and the Political Economies
of Reform.” American Journal of Political Science 51 (4): 703–720.
B¨
uthe, Tim, and Helen V. Milner. 2008. “The Politics of Foreign Direct Investment into Developing Countries: Increasing FDI through International Trade Agreements?” American
Journal of Political Science 52 (4): 741–762.
Coase, Ronald H. 1937. “The nature of the firm.” economica 4 (16): 386–405.
Dutt, Pushan, and Devashish Mitra. 2005. “Political ideology and endogenous trade policy:
an empirical investigation.” Review of Economics and Statistics 87 (1): 59–72.
29
Elkins, Zachary, Andrew T Guzman, and Beth A Simmons. 2006. “Competing for capital:
The diffusion of bilateral investment treaties, 1960–2000.” International organization 60
(04): 811–846.
Esping-Andersen, Gøsta. 1990. The three worlds of welfare capitalism. Vol. 6 Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press.
Garrett, Geoffrey. 1998. “Global markets and national politics: collision course or virtuous
circle?” International Organization 52 (4): 787–824.
Gawande, Kishore, Bernard Hoekman, and Yue Cui. 2014. “Determinants of Trade Policy
Responses to the 2008 Financial Crisis.” World Bank Economic Review forthcoming.
Gawande, Kishore, Pravin Krishna, and Marcelo Olarreaga. 2009. “What Governments
Maximize and Why: The View from Trade.” International Organization 63 (03): 491–532.
Gereffi, Gary, John Humphrey, and Timothy Sturgeon. 2005. “The Governance of Global
Value Chains.” Review of International Political Economy 12 (1): 78–104.
Grossman, Gene M, and Esteban Rossi-Hansberg. 2008. “Trading tasks: A simple theory of
offshoring.” American Economic Review 98 (5): 1978–1997.
Grossman, Sanford J, and Oliver D Hart. 1986. “The costs and benefits of ownership: A
theory of vertical and lateral integration.” The Journal of Political Economy 94 (4): 691–
719.
Hart, Oliver, and John Moore. 1990. “Property Rights and the Nature of the Firm.” Journal
of political economy 98 (6): 1119–1158.
Helpman, Elhanan. 1984. “A Simple Theory of International Trade with Multinational
Corporations.” Journal of Political Economy 92 (3): 451–471.
Henisz, Witold J. 2000. “The Institutional Environment for Multinational Investment.”
Journal of Law Economics and Organization 16 (2): 334–364.
Henisz, Witold J. 2002. “The Institutional Environment for Infrastructure Investment.”
Industrial and Corporate Change 11 (2): 355–389.
Hiscox, Michael J. 2001. “Class versus industry cleavages: inter-industry factor mobility and
the politics of trade.” International Organization 55 (01): 1–46.
Hiscox, Michael J. 2002. International trade and political conflict: commerce, coalitions, and
mobility. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
Iversen, Torben. 1999. Contested economic institutions: The politics of macroeconomics and
wage bargaining in advanced democracies. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Jensen, J Bradford, Dennis P Quinn, and Stephen J Weymouth. 2015a. Globalizations
Concentrated Costs (and Benefits): Import Competition, Globally Engaged Firms, and
U.S. Presidential Voting. Working paper.
30
Jensen, J. Bradford, Dennis P. Quinn, and Stephen Weymouth. 2015b. “The Influences of
Foreign Direct Investments, Intrafirm Trading, and Currency Undervaluation on US Firm
Trade Disputes.” International Organization forthcoming.
Jensen, Nathan M. 2003. “Democratic Governance and Multinational Corporations: Political
Regimes and Inflows of Foreign Direct Investment.” International Organization 57 (3):
587–616.
Jensen, Nathan M. 2008. “Political Regimes and Political Risk: Democratic Institutions and
Expropriation Risk for Multinational Investors.” Journal of Politics 70 (4): 1040–1052.
Jensen, Nathan M., Glen Biglaiser, Quan Li, Edmund Malesky, Pablo M. Pinto, Santiago M.
Pinto, and Joseph L. Staats. 2012. Politics and Foreign Direct Investment: What Makes a
Country Attractive to Multinational Corporations? Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan
Press.
Kerner, Andrew, and Jane Lawrence. 2014. “What’s The Risk? Bilateral Investment
Treaties, Political Risk and Fixed Capital Accumulation.” British Journal of Political
Science 44 (1): 107–121.
Lanz, Rainer, and S´ebastien Miroudot. 2011. Intra-Firm Trade: patterns, determinants and
policy implications. Technical report OECD Publishing.
Li, Quan, and Adam Resnick. 2003. “Reversal of Fortunes: Democratic Institutions and
Foreign Direct Investment Inflows to Developing Countries.” International Organization
57 (1): 175–211.
Manger, Mark S. 2012. “Vertical Trade Specialization and the Formation of North-South
PTAs.” World Politics 64 (4).
Mansfield, Edward D., and Diana C. Mutz. 2013. “US versus Them: Mass Attitudes toward
Offshore Outsourcing.” World Politics 65 (4).
Margalit, Yotam. 2011. “Costly Jobs: Trade-related Layoffs, Government Compensation,
and Voting in U.S. Elections.” American Political Science Review 105 (1): 166–188.
Milner, Helen V. 1988. Resisting Protectionism: Global Industries and the Politics of International Trade. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Milner, Helen V., and Benjamin Judkins. 2004. “Partisanship, Trade Policy, and Globalization: Is There a Left-Right Divide on Trade Policy?” International Studies Quarterly 48
(1): 95–120.
Milner, Helen V, and Keiko Kubota. 2005. “Why the move to free trade? Democracy and
trade policy in the developing countries.” International organization 59 (01): 107–143.
Nunn, Nathan. 2007. “Relationship-specificity, incomplete contracts, and the pattern of
trade.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 122 (2): 569–600.
31
Nunn, Nathan, and Daniel Trefler. 2012. “Incomplete Contracts and the Boundaries of the
Multinational Firm.” Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization .
Nunn, Nathan, and Daniel Trefler. 2013. Domestic institutions as a source of comparative
advantage. Working Paper 18851 National Bureau of Economic Research.
Olson, Mancur. 1993. “Dictatorship, Democracy, and Development.” The American Political
Science Review 87 (3): 567–576.
Owen, Erica. 2015a. Exposure to Offshoring and the Politics of Trade Liberalization: Debate
and Votes on Free Trade Agreements in the 108th U.S. Congress. Working paper.
Owen, Erica. 2015b. “The Political Power of Organized Labor and the Politics of Foreign
Direct Investment in Developed Democracies.” Comparative Political Studies forthcoming.
Pinto, Pablo M. 2013. Partisan Investment in the Global Economy: Why the Left Loves
Foreign Direct Investment and FDI Loves the Left. New York, NY: Cambridge University
Press.
Pinto, Pablo M., and Santiago M. Pinto. 2008. “The Politics of Investment: Partisanship
and the Sectoral Allocation of Foreign Direct Investment.” Economics and Politics 20 (2):
216–254.
Pinto, Pablo M., and Santiago M. Pinto. 2011. Partisanship and the Allocation of Foreign
Investment under Imperfect Capital Mobility. In Annual Meeting of the American Political
Science Association (September 1-4, 2011). Seattle, WA: .
Pinto, Pablo M, Stephen Weymouth, and Peter Gourevitch. 2010. “The politics of stock
market development.” Review of International Political Economy 17 (2): 378–409.
Quinn, Dennis, Martin Schindler, and A Maria Toyoda. 2011. “Assessing measures of financial openness and integration.” IMF Economic Review 59 (3): 488–522.
Quinn, Dennis P, and Carla Inclan. 1997. “The origins of financial openness: A study of
current and capital account liberalization.” American Journal of Political Science 41 (3):
771–813.
Rogowski, Ronald. 1987a. “Political Cleavages and Changing Exposure to Trade.” The
American Political Science Review 81 (4): 1121–1137.
Rogowski, Ronald. 1987b. “Trade and the variety of democratic institutions.” International
organization pp. 203–223.
Rogowski, Ronald. 1989. Commerce and coalitions: how trade affects domestic political
alignments. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
Rose-Ackerman, Susan, and Jennifer Tobin. 2005. “Foreign direct investment and the business environment in developing countries: The impact of bilateral investment treaties.”
Yale Law & Economics Research Paper (293).
32
Scheve, Kenneth, and Matthew J. Slaughter. 2004. “Economic Insecurity and the Globalization of Production.” American Journal of Political Science 48 (4): 662–674.
Stolper, Wolfgang F., and Paul A. Samuelson. 1941. “Protection and Real Wages.” The
Review of Economic Studies 9 (1): 58–73.
Tobin, Jennifer L, and Marc L Busch. 2010. “A BIT is better than a lot: Bilateral investment
treaties and preferential trade agreements.” World Politics 62 (01): 1–42.
Weymouth, Stephen, and J Lawrence Broz. 2013. “Government Partisanship and Property
Rights: Cross-Country Firm-Level Evidence.” Economics & Politics 25 (2): 229–256.
Williamson, Oliver E. 1985. The Economic Institutions of Capitalism: Firms, Markets,
Relational Contracting. New York, NY: Free Press.
Yeaple, Stephen Ross. 2003. “The role of skill endowments in the structure of US outward
foreign direct investment.” Review of Economics and Statistics 85 (3): 726–734.
Zeile, William J. 2003. “Trade in goods within multinational companies: Survey-based data
and findings for the United States of America.” Prepared for the OECD Committee on
Industry and Business Environment Working Party on Statistics, Session on Globalisation,
Paris, France, November pp. 3–4.
33
Figure 1: Firms’ Production Strategies
Location
Home country
Integration
Vertical FDI  Intrafirm
trade
Domestic outsourcing
Offshore outsourcing
Ownership
In-house
Foreign country
Outsource
34
Figure 2: Variation in U.S. Intrafirm Import Shares across Countries, Top 25 Exporters of
Basic Chemicals to the U.S.
South Korea
China
Trinidad and Tobago
India
Japan
Mexico
Russia
Brazil
Italy
Belgium
Canada
Netherlands
France
Norway
United Kingdom
Switzerland
Germany
Venezuela
Kuwait
Algeria
Singapore
Saudi Arabia
Colombia
Iraq
Ireland
.2
.4
.6
.8
1
Intrafirm Share of Total Imports (Basic Chemicals - NAICS 3251)
Note: Authors’ calculations using data from the Related Party Trade Database of the U.S.
Census Bureau. The dot size corresponds to the value of total U.S. imports from each
country.
35
Figure 3: U.S. Intrafirm Import Shares over Time: Basic Chemicals
.6
Australia
Left
0
.1
Related Party/Total Imports
.2
.3
.4
.5
Right
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2011
2012
2013
New Zealand
Right
.5
.6
Related Party/Total Imports
.7
.8
.9
Left
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Note: The figure graphs the share of U.S. related party imports of Basic Chemicals in total
U.S. imports of Basic Chemicals from Australia and New Zealand.
36
0
2
4
6
Percentage of Observations
8
Marginal Effect of Democracy on Pr(Vertical Affiliate)
-.005
0
.005
.01
.015
Figure 4: Marginal Effect of the Democracy on Vertical Affiliate Presence (Derived from
Estimates in Table 1, column 4)
.1
.2
.3
.4
.5
.6
.7
.8
Contract Intensity (industry-level)
.9
1
0
-.05
2
4
6
8
Percentage of Observations
Marginal Effect of Left on Intrafirm Trade
0
.05
.1
10
Figure 5: Marginal Effect of the Left on Ratio of Intrafirm to Total Trade (Derived from
Estimates in Table 2, column 4)
-3 -2.75 -2.5 -2.25 -2 -1.75 -1.5 -1.25 -1 -.75 -.5 -.25
Capital Intensity (industry-level)
37
0
.25
38
8147
0.291
8147
0.290
8147
0.285
(1)
(2)
(3)
0.708*** 0.731*** 0.683***
(0.031)
(0.033)
(0.030)
-0.066** -0.130***
-0.042
(0.033)
(0.034)
(0.032)
0.369*** 0.367*** 0.539***
(0.084)
(0.083)
(0.084)
-0.197*** -0.248*** -0.351***
(0.075)
(0.075)
(0.076)
0.400*** 0.377*** 0.544***
(0.126)
(0.126)
(0.128)
0.065***
(0.006)
0.208***
(0.021)
1.395***
(0.158)
0.862*
(0.457)
0.088***
(0.033)
8147
0.194
(4)
0.529***
(0.029)
-0.041
(0.028)
0.248***
(0.072)
-0.128**
(0.063)
0.337***
(0.112)
0.002
(0.019)
Note: The dependent variable is a dummy variable equal to 1 if there are positive related-party imports at the 4-digit NAICS
industry for all country-industry pairs with positive imports; 0 otherwise. The related party trade data are from 2002. A constant
is estimated but not reported. Models 1-3 include industry fixed effects. Robust standard errors, adjusted for clustering at the
four-digit NAICS, are reported in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.10.
Observations
Pseudo R-squared
Polity x Contract Intensity
Contract Intensity
Political Constaints
Political Rights (Freedom House)
Polity
OECD
Distance
English
GDP per capita
GDP
Table 1: Cross-Sectional Determinants of Vertical MNC Affiliates
39
37067
0.142
-0.147
(0.101)
0.175
(0.106)
-0.003
(0.004)
37067
0.151
-0.151
(0.101)
0.178*
(0.106)
0.003
(0.005)
-0.012**
(0.006)
(2)
37067
0.142
0.001
(0.004)
-0.151
(0.098)
0.178*
(0.103)
-0.003
(0.004)
(3)
37067
0.148
0.038**
(0.017)
0.025
(0.018)
0.021**
(0.009)
-0.151
(0.098)
0.178*
(0.104)
-0.003
(0.004)
(4)
37067
0.257
0.019**
(0.009)
0.035**
(0.017)
--
-0.154
(0.099)
0.177*
(0.104)
-0.003
(0.004)
(5)
-0.095*
(0.054)
-0.166***
(0.019)
-0.071**
(0.028)
0.005***
(0.002)
-0.405***
(0.066)
39892
--
(6)
Heckman
First
-0.277
(0.399)
0.533
(0.410)
-0.012
(0.028)
39892
--
0.035**
(0.015)
0.050***
(0.006)
0.022***
(0.008)
(7)
Heckman
Second
-0.177
(0.118)
0.182
(0.123)
-0.003
(0.009)
Note: The dependent variable is the share of related party imports in total imports for all country-industry pairs with positive
related-party imports. A constant is estimated but not reported. All models include country and year fixed effects; Column 5
includes industry fixed effects. Robust standard errors, adjusted for clustering at the 4-digit NAICS, are reported in parentheses.
*** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.10.
Observations
R-squared
Lambda
Capital Account Openness
Left x Capital Intensity
Capital Intensity
Left
Polity x Contract Intensity
Polity
GDP per capita
GDP
(1)
Table 2: Determinants of Intrafirm Trade, 2002-2012
40
37067
0.165
--
--
0.025
(0.019)
0.023**
(0.009)
--
--
37067
0.147
0.039**
(0.017)
0.025
(0.018)
0.021**
(0.009)
-0.152
(0.098)
0.179*
(0.101)
-0.003
(0.004)
(2)
year trend
37067
0.151
37067
0.257
37067
0.148
37067
0.148
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
countryindustry- cluster SE by cluster SE by
specific year specific year
country
industrytrend
trend
country pairs
0.036**
0.035**
0.038*
0.038**
(0.016)
(0.017)
(0.021)
(0.016)
0.025
-1.356
0.025**
0.025***
(0.018)
(2.910)
(0.011)
(0.007)
0.022**
0.019**
0.021*
0.021**
(0.009)
(0.009)
(0.012)
(0.009)
0.327
-0.155
-0.151
-0.151*
(0.318)
(0.098)
(0.099)
(0.083)
-0.188
0.177*
0.178*
0.178**
(0.328)
(0.101)
(0.103)
(0.088)
0.007
-0.004
-0.003
-0.003
(0.007)
(0.004)
(0.006)
(0.005)
32821
0.600
0.007
(0.007)
0.009***
(0.002)
0.007**
(0.004)
-0.011***
(0.001)
0.009***
(0.001)
-0.000
(0.000)
0.767***
(0.004)
(7)
lagged DV
0.137**
(0.057)
-0.017
(0.026)
37067
0.150
-0.153
(0.099)
0.179*
(0.104)
-0.003
(0.004)
(8)
contractintensity
placebo test
0.010
(0.014)
Note: The dependent variable is the share of related party imports in total imports for all country-industry pairs with positive
related-party imports. A constant is estimated but not reported. Unless otherwise stated, robust standard errors, adjusted for
clustering at the 4-digit NAICS, are reported in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.10.
Observations
R-squared
Left x Contract Intensity
Contract Intensity
Intrafirm Trade (t-1)
Polity
GDP per capita
GDP
Left x Capital Intensity
Capital Intensity
Left
(1)
country-year
FE
Table 3: Robustness Tests: Intrafirm Trade, 2002-2012
41
country
6690
0.198
--
Subsample 2
0.089***
(0.032)
Subsample 1
0.100***
(0.034)
country
7759
0.227
--
(2)
Dummy for
Intrafirm Trade
in 2002
(1)
Dummy for
Intrafirm Trade
in 2002
country
5520
0.164
--
(3)
Dummy for
Intrafirm Trade
in 2002
non-OECD
countries
0.075**
(0.031)
0.041**
(0.016)
0.022**
(0.009)
-0.141
(0.098)
0.170
(0.103)
-0.003
(0.004)
country, year
35191
-0.151
Subsample 1
(4)
Intrafirm Trade
Share, 20022012
0.064***
(0.017)
0.036***
(0.009)
-0.157
(0.116)
0.184
(0.118)
0.001
(0.005)
country, year
25718
-0.146
Subsample 2
(5)
Intrafirm Trade
Share, 20022012
0.098***
(0.019)
0.058***
(0.009)
-0.081
(0.125)
0.075
(0.119)
0.002
(0.005)
country, year
16413
-0.127
(6)
Intrafirm Trade
Share, 20022012
non-OECD
countries
Note: The dependent variable in columns 1-3 is a dummy variable equal to 1 if there are positive related-party imports at the
4-digit NAICS industry in 2002 for all country-industry pairs with positive imports; 0 otherwise. In columns 4-6, the dependent
variable is the share of related party imports in total imports for all country-industry pairs with positive related-party imports,
2002-2012. Subsample 1 excludes countries where U.S.-based parents account for less than 50% of the relationships in the Orbis
data (see Nunn and Trefler (2012)); Subsample 2 excludes all countries below the 75% threshold. A constant is estimated but
not reported. Robust standard errors, adjusted for clustering at the 4-digit NAICS, are reported in parentheses. *** p < 0.01,
** p < 0.05, * p < 0.10.
Fixed Effects
Observations
Pseudo R-squared
R-squared
Polity
GDP per capita
GDP
Left x Capital Intensity
Left
Polity x Contract Intensity
Dependent Variable:
Table 4: Determinants of Vertical Affiliates and Intrafirm Trade: Restricted Samples
Proposed Online Appendix
42
Table A.1: Summary Statistics
Variable
Vertical Affiliate Dummy
Intrafirm Trade Share
GDP
GDP per capita
Distance to U.S.
English
OECD
Contract Intensity
Capital Intensity
Obs
39892
37067
37067
37067
8641
8641
8641
104
85
Mean
0.790
0.369
26.091
9.278
8.909
0.222
0.317
0.486
-1.699
Std. Dev.
0.408
0.299
1.771
1.413
0.522
0.416
0.465
0.204
0.583
Note: The variable definitions and sources appear in the text.
43
Min
0
0
19.79
5.31
6.31
0
0
0.11
-3.04
Max
1
1
29.19
11.36
9.69
1
1
0.98
0.27
Table A.2: Determinants of Total Imports, 2002-2012 (ECM)
DV
Ln Total Imports (t-1)
Left
Capital Intensity
Left x Capital Intensity
Ln GDP (t-1)
Ln GDP per capita (t-1)
Polity (t-1)
ΔLn GDP
ΔLn GDP per capita
ΔPolity
Observations
R-squared
ΔLn Total Imports
-0.060 ***
(0.004)
-0.057 ***
(0.020)
0.074 ***
(0.015)
-0.030 ***
(0.011)
0.071 ***
(0.006)
0.004
(0.006)
-0.006 ***
(0.001)
-2.226 ***
(0.631)
3.933 ***
(0.652)
0.016
(0.010)
46227
0.0339
Note: The dependent variable is the natural log of total U.S. imports. A constant is estimated
but not reported. Robust standard errors, adjusted for clustering at the 4-digit NAICS, are
reported in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.10.
44
Figure A.1: Intrafirm Shares by Incumbent Partisanship: Basic Chemicals
Australia: US Imports of Basic Chemicals
Left
.4
.3
.1
.2
Intra-firm/Total Imports
.5
.6
Right
New Zealand: US Imports of Basic Chemicals
Left
.8
.7
.6
.5
Intra-firm/Total Imports
.9
Right
45
.5
Figure A.2: Capital Intensity and Intrafirm Trade
Intrafirm Imports/Total Imports
.1
.2
.3
.4
3361
3262
3344
3251
3363
3252
3345
3254
3341
3311
3359 3336
3335 3331
3312
3342
3391
3334 3343 3255
3313
3339
3325
3327
3333
3221
3253
3322
3365
3352
3369
3332
3329
3326
3362
3351
3133
3259
32223261
3324 3321
3372
3272
3111
3271 3314
3323
3379
3399
3149
3169
3364
3346
3256
3152 3162
3315
3273
3279
3159
3151
3119
3371
3132
3113
3366
3141
3212 3122
3219 3231
3115
3131 3211
3112 3121
3161
3118
3114
3274
3116
3117
3353
0
3241
-3.5
-3
-2.5
-2
-1.5
-1
Capital Intensity
-.5
0
.5
1
Note: The figure displays the correlation between industry-level capital intensity and intrafirm trade shares. The data points correspond to NAICS 4-digit industries. The data
sources are provided in the text.
46
.001
Computer Imports/U.S. GDP
.003
.004
.005
.002
.006
Figure A.3: Growth in Fragmented Production in Non-OECD Countries
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
year
from non-OECD countries
.0015
Component Imports/U.S. GDP
.002
.0025
.003
.0035
from OECD countries
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
year
from OECD countries
from non-OECD countries
Note: The graphs show total U.S. imports as a share of GDP for two industries in which production is highly fragmented: Computer and Peripheral Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS
3341) and Semiconductor and Other Component Manufacturing (NAICS 3344).
47
0
2
4
6
8
Percentage of observations
Marginal effect of Left on change in Ln Total Trade
-.1
-.05
0
.05
10
Figure A.4: Marginal effect of Left on ∆Ln Total Imports (Derived from Estimates in Table
A.2)
-3 -2.75 -2.5 -2.25 -2 -1.75 -1.5 -1.25 -1 -.75 -.5 -.25
Capital intensity (industry level)
48
0
.25
0
-.1
2
4
6
8
Percentage of Observations
10
Marginal Effect of the Left on Intrafirm Trade
.05
.1
-.05
0
.15
Figure A.5: Effect of the Left on Intrafirm Trade - Non-OECD countries (Derived from
Estimates in Table 4, column 6)
-3 -2.75 -2.5 -2.25 -2 -1.75 -1.5 -1.25 -1 -.75 -.5 -.25
Capital Intensity (industry-level)
49
0
.25